Sexo sin freno a los 70 años
28 julio, 2009 a las 13:02/ por moscacojoneraCNN) — Shigeo Tokuda looks like your average retiree, wearing a classy gray suit and distinguished glasses. But there is nothing average about this 73-year-old when he steps in front of the camera. Shigeo Tokuda is a porn star.
Shigeo Tokuda (his pseudonym) says he hopes to work until he’s 80 or even older.
From women in their 20’s to their 70’s, Tokuda romances them all (sometimes more than one at a time). Tokuda is a genuine leading man in the genre of elderly porn, starring in more than 200 adult videos. Tokuda (that’s his porn name) is so successful, he is a brand.
«I retired and didn’t have anything to do,» says Tokuda, a former 9 to 5 travel agent. «This is my second life. I don’t know how long I can keep living, but I want to enjoy the rest of it.»
Tokuda certainly looks like he’s enjoying life, saying he’s healthier now than he’s been in years. So are sales of his DVD’s, primarily among middle-aged and elderly buyers.
«In his generation, Tokuda is a superstar,» says Gaichi Kono, an adult video director who has worked with Tokuda. Watch how Shigeo Tokuda has launched a second career »
«He encourages older people to think, I can do this because that old man can do this.»
Ruby Productions produces Tokuda’s movies and specializes in elderly porn videos. It’s a genre they helped pioneer by accident.
Don’t Miss
- TIME.com: Japan’s booming sex niche: elder porn
- Blog: An inspirational rising star
Ryuichi Kadowaki, president of Ruby Productions, says they started producing adult videos with people in their 30’s to good sales. They creeped up to 40 year old actors and they sold even better. Kadowaki says they went up to actors in their 50’s, then 60’s, and now they’re producing an entire line of adult videos with actors in their 70’s.
And their star, says Ruby, is Tokuda. «To be honest, I don’t understand why people are buying these videos,» he says. «I think our older customers must feel a sense of security by watching videos with an actor who is in the same generation.»
Ruby says it’s targeting the elderly audience and considering selling videos in retirement homes. Ruby also says it’s just completed a deal to release some of Tokuda’s movies in the U.S.
Japan does have a higher percentage of people over the age of 65 than any country in the world. Ruby Productions says it’s just meeting a demand of an aging Japanese society.
Tokuda says his friends are envious, because he’s in a job where he’s valued, something many seniors lack. «Seniors get depressed because they don’t have anything to do. They go crazy,» says Tokuda.
http://edition.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/asiapcf/07/27/japan.porn/index.html?iref=mpstoryview
==========
fuente: http://vanillaedge.wordpress.com/2008/08/13/for-elderly-sex-doesnt-have-to-get-old/
For elderly, sex doesn’t have to get old
By Andrew Stern
CHICAGO (Reuters) – Getting old does not mean saying so long to sex, U.S. researchers said on Wednesday.
More than three-quarters of American men aged 75 to 85 and half of women that age are still interested in sex, a survey of the elderly by University of Chicago researchers found.
“It’s not age per se; that when you get to 80 it’s all over with,” said sociologist Edward Laumann, who led the study of 3,000 American men and women aged 57 to 85 who lived at home, not in nursing homes.
“It’s driven by more proximate factors such as if you become obese, or you’re smoking too much, or you contract diabetes. Medications can depress sexual interest. The aging process itself is not a major factor driving these results,” he said in a telephone interview.
Laumann and his team, who performed a companion survey of younger adults nearly a decade ago, found that sexual dysfunction such as experiencing pain during sex or an inability to achieve orgasm tend to increase as adults reach middle age but then plateaus.
In the survey of elderly Americans, two-thirds of the men and nearly half the women had been sexually active in the past year, they reported in the Journal of Sexual Medicine.
The reasons for losing interest in sex are wrapped up in several physical and mental health factors, Laumann said.
“If sexual health goes to hell, it may be a canary in the mine shaft. It may be a sign of health problems,” Laumann said, urging doctors to investigate if sexual problems arise.
Chronic urinary tract infections and incontinence often suppress sex lives, he said.
Having a partner to have sex with can also be problematic for the elderly. Among women aged 70 and older, 70 percent have outlived or are separated from their spouses. Among men in that age group, 35 percent have lost a long-time partner.
If the surviving relationship is bad, that can snuff out the couple’s sex life, Laumann added.
“Anxiety is very clearly a big factor (in sexual dysfunction) for women, and depression in men,” he said. “And men can become very depressed because of sexual dysfunction.”
Erectile dysfunction increases from 31 percent among men aged 57 to 64 to more than 40 percent among older men. Laumann said he had found in other research that 14 percent of men of all ages had tried erectile dysfunction drugs.
Those who have attended college are less likely to have sexual problems than the less-educated, Laumann said, presumably because the educated tend to dismiss myths about sex and aging and are more likely to seek out answers.
Last month, Swedish researchers reported that 70-year-olds of both sexes are having more sex than they did 30 years ago, with 68 percent of married men and 54 percent of women saying they were having sex in 2001, up from 52 percent of men in the early 1970s and 30 percent of women.
(Editing by Maggie Fox)
From Reuter’s News 8/13/2008
=====
Well.
Back in the late 1960s and early 1970ss, there was a TV show in the US called “Laugh-In” that featured fast-paced skits, quips, and of course, the ubiquitous fake news show. One of the regular features was an actor who played a very aged man that frequently made suggestive comments to the (younger and attractive) women on the show, and occasionally to another actor playing an older woman. He was always rebuffed, sometimes physically; the implication was that he was a “dirty” old man. The message that sunk into my pre-teen mind from that and other shows, was that at some point in life, sex was going to be a bad thing, so you’d better get it out of your system when you were young, because past (whatever “old” was) nobody was going to want to have it with you.
The amazing thing is that in the last 40 years, society has learned to be okay with non-married sexuality and homosexuality. We’ve learned to accept masturbation as normal, and we even give suggestions in some schools, relative to safety and disease.
So, why are we still not okay with old people having sex?
Is it because we’re not beautiful? Is it because we’ve got wrinkles? Some extra body fat? Hair growing out of various places? Scars, warts, liver spots?
Is it simply because we’re not young?
I’m going to remind you what media blog Gawker wrote about Kim Cattrall in their review about her new cable TV show:
The positively ancient fifty-something coital acrobat has signed on to play the lead in a new series […]
Hopefully by the time that I’m *cough*old*cough* societal attitudes will have changed, and I’ll be able to have sex with out feeling like I’m a “dirty old man.”
—-